Book Image

The Python Apprentice

By : Robert Smallshire, Austin Bingham
Book Image

The Python Apprentice

By: Robert Smallshire, Austin Bingham

Overview of this book

Experienced programmers want to know how to enhance their craft and we want to help them start as apprentices with Python. We know that before mastering Python you need to learn the culture and the tools to become a productive member of any Python project. Our goal with this book is to give you a practical and thorough introduction to Python programming, providing you with the insight and technical craftsmanship you need to be a productive member of any Python project. Python is a big language, and it’s not our intention with this book to cover everything there is to know. We just want to make sure that you, as the developer, know the tools, basic idioms and of course the ins and outs of the language, the standard library and other modules to be able to jump into most projects.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Authors
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
12
Afterword – Just the Beginning

Summary


  • Starting out with Python
    • Obtaining and installing Python 3

    • Starting the Read-Eval-Print-Loop or REPL

    • Simple arithmetic

    • Creating variables by binding objects to names

    • Printing with the built-in print() function

    • Exiting the REPL with Ctrl+Z (Windows) or Ctrl+D (Unix)

  • Being Pythonic

    • Significant indentation

    • PEP 8 - The Style Guide for Python Code

    • PEP 20 - The Zen of Python

  • Importing modules with the import statement in various forms

  • Finding and browsing help()

  • Basic types and control flow

    • ints, floats, None, and bool, plus conversions between them

    • Relational operators for equality and ordering tests

    • The if-statements with else and elif blocks

    • The while-loops with implicit conversion to bool

    • Interrupting infinite loops with Ctrl+C

    • Breaking out of loops with break

  • Requesting text from the user with input()

  • Augmented assignment operators